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Sökning: WFRF:(Lennernäs Pernilla)

  • Resultat 1-7 av 7
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2.
  • Carlert, Sara, et al. (författare)
  • In Vivo Dog Intestinal Precipitation of Mebendazole : A Basic BCS Class II Drug
  • 2012
  • Ingår i: Molecular Pharmaceutics. - : American Chemical Society (ACS). - 1543-8384 .- 1543-8392. ; 9:10, s. 2903-2911
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The purpose of this study was to investigate in viva intestinal precipitation of a model drug mebendazole, a basic BCS class II drug, using dogs with intestinal stomas for administration or sampling. After oral administration of a solution with an expected intestinal supersaturation of approximately 20 times the solubility, the measured supersaturation in dog intestinal fluid (DIE) was up to 10 times and, on average, only 11% of the given dose was retrieved as solid drug in the collected fluid from the stoma. The drug was rapidly absorbed with >90% of the total systemic exposure reached within three hours after duodenal administration of a solution. In silico absorption modeling showed that in vivo data were reasonably well described by a nonprecipitating solution. An in vitro model of precipitation in DIF predicted that the intestinal concentration of dissolved mebendazole would be less than 1/5 of the initial concentration within 10 min at concentrations comparable to in vivo. It was concluded that intestinal precipitation did not have any major influence on mebendazole absorption. The extent of precipitation was overpredicted in vitro given the in vivo absorption rate, and further work is needed to identify in vitro factors that could enable more accurate in vivo predictions of intestinal precipitation from solutions.
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3.
  • Dahlgren, David, et al. (författare)
  • Regional Intestinal Permeability in Dogs : Biopharmaceutical Aspects for Development of Oral Modified-Release Dosage Forms
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Molecular Pharmaceutics. - : American Chemical Society (ACS). - 1543-8384 .- 1543-8392. ; 13:9, s. 3022-3033
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The development of oral modified-release (MR) dosage forms requires an active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) with a sufficiently high absorption rate in both the small and large intestine. Dogs are commonly used in preclinical evaluation of regional intestinal absorption and in the development of novel MR dosage forms. This study determined regional intestinal effective permeability (P-eff) in dogs with the aim to improve regional Peff prediction in humans. Four model drugs, atenolol, enalaprilat, metoprolol, and ketoprofen, were intravenously and regionally dosed twice as a solution into the proximal small intestine (P-SI) and large intestine (LI) of three dogs with intestinal stomas. Based on plasma data from two separate study occasions for each dog, regional Peff values were calculated using a validated intestinal deconvolution method. The determined mean P-eff values were 0.62, 0.14, 1.06, and 3.66 X 10(-4) cm/s in the P-SI, and 0.13, 0.02, 1.03, and 2.20 X 10(-4) cm/s in the LI, for atenolol, enalaprilat, metoprolol, and ketoprofen, respectively. The determined P-SI Peff values in dog were highly correlated (R-2 = 0.98) to the historically directly determined human jejunal P-eff after a single-pass perfusion. The determined dog P-SI P-eff values were also successfully implemented in GI-Sim to predict the risk for overestimation of LI absorption of low permeability drugs. We conclude that the dog intestinal stoma model is a useful preclinical tool for determination of regional intestinal permeability. Still, further studies are recommended to evaluate additional APIs, sources of variability, and formulation types, for more accurate determination of the dog model in the drug development process.
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4.
  • Darwich, Adam S., et al. (författare)
  • IMI - Oral biopharmaceutics tools project - Evaluation of bottom-up PBPK prediction success part 3 : Identifying gaps in system parameters by analysing In Silico performance across different compound classes
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. - : Elsevier BV. - 0928-0987 .- 1879-0720. ; 96, s. 626-642
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Three Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic software packages (GI-Sim, Simcyp (R) Simulator, and GastroPlus (TM)) were evaluated as part of the Innovative Medicine Initiative Oral Biopharmaceutics Tools project (OrBiTo) during a blinded "bottom-up" anticipation of human pharmacokinetics. After data analysis of the predicted vs. measured pharmacokinetics parameters, it was found that oral bioavailability (F-oral) was underpredicted for compounds with low permeability, suggesting improper estimates of intestinal surface area, colonic absorption and/or lack of intestinal transporter information. Foralwas also underpredicted for acidic compounds, suggesting overestimation of impact of ionisation on permeation, lack of information on intestinal transporters, or underestimation of solubilisation of weak acids due to less than optimal intestinal model pH settings or underestimation of bile micelle contribution. F-oral was overpredicted for weak bases, suggesting inadequate models for precipitation or lack of in vitro precipitation information to build informed models. Relative bioavailability was underpredicted for both high logP compounds as well as poorly water-soluble compounds, suggesting inadequate models for solubility/dissolution, underperforming bile enhancement models and/or lack of biorelevant solubility measurements. These results indicate areas for improvement in model software, modelling approaches, and generation of applicable input data. However, caution is required when interpreting the impact of drug-specific properties in this exercise, as the availability of input parameters was heterogeneous and highly variable, and the modellers generally used the data "as is" in this blinded bottom-up prediction approach.
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6.
  • Margolskee, Alison, et al. (författare)
  • IMI - Oral biopharmaceutics tools project - Evaluation of bottom-up PBPK prediction success part 2 : An introduction to the simulation exercise and overview of results
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. - : Elsevier BV. - 0928-0987 .- 1879-0720. ; 96, s. 610-625
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Orally administered drugs are subject to a number of barriers impacting bioavailability (F-oral), causing challenges during drug and formulation development. Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modelling can help during drug and formulation development by providing quantitative predictions through a systems approach. The performance of three available PBPK software packages (GI-Sim, Simcyp (R), and GastroPlus (TM)) were evaluated by comparing simulated and observed pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters. Since the availability of input parameters was heterogeneous and highly variable, caution is required when interpreting the results of this exercise. Additionally, this prospective simulation exercise may not be representative of prospective modelling in industry, as API information was limited to sparse details. 43 active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) from the OrBiTo database were selected for the exercise. Over 4000 simulation output files were generated, representing over 2550 study arm-institution-software combinations and approximately 600 human clinical study arms simulated with overlap. 84% of the simulated study arms represented administration of immediate release formulations, 11% prolonged or delayed release, and 5% intravenous (i.v.). Higher percentages of i.v. predicted area under the curve (AUC) were within two-fold of observed (52.9%) compared to per oral (p.o.) (37.2%), however, F-oral and relative AUC (F-rel) between p.o. formulations and solutions were generally well predicted (64.7% and 75.0%). Predictive performance declined progressing from i.v. to solution and immediate release tablet, indicating the compounding error with each layer of complexity. Overall performance was comparable to previous large-scale evaluations. A general overprediction of AUC was observed with average fold error (AFE) of 1.56 over all simulations. AFE ranged from 0.0361 to 64.0 across the 43 APIs, with 25 showing overpredictions. Discrepancies between software packages were observed for a few APIs, the largest being 606, 171, and 81.7-fold differences in AFE between SimCYP and GI-Sim, however average performance was relatively consistent across the three software platforms.
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7.
  • Matsson, Elin, et al. (författare)
  • Effects of ketoconazole on the in vivo biotransformation and hepatobiliary transport of the thrombin inhibitor AZD0837 in pigs
  • 2011
  • Ingår i: Drug Metabolism And Disposition. - : American Society for Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET). - 0090-9556 .- 1521-009X. ; 39:2, s. 239-246
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Ketoconazole has been shown in clinical trials to increase the plasma exposure of the oral anticoagulant prodrug AZD0837 [(2S)-N-{4- [(Z)-amino(methoxyimino)methyl]benzyl}-1-{(2R)-2-[3-chloro-5-(difluoromethoxy)phenyl]-2-hydroxyethanoyl}-azetidine-2-carboxamide] and its active metabolite, AR-H067637 [(2S)-N-{4-[amino(imino)methyl]benzyl}-1-{(2R)-2-[3-chloro-5-(difluoromethoxy)phenyl]-2-hydroxyethanoyl}-azetidine-2-carboxamide]. To investigate the biotransformation of AZD0837 and the effect of ketoconazole on this process, we used an experimental model in pigs that allows repeated sampling from three blood vessels, the bile duct, and a perfused intestinal segment. The pigs received AZD0837 (500 mg) given enterally either alone (n = 5) or together with single-dose ketoconazole (600 mg) (n = 6). The prodrug (n = 2) and its active metabolite (n = 2) were also administered intravenously to provide reference doses. The plasma data revealed considerable interindividual variation in the exposure of the prodrug, intermediate metabolite, and active metabolite. However, AR-H067637 was detected at very high concentrations in the bile with low variability (Ae(bile) = 53 ± 6% of the enteral dose), showing that the compound had indeed been formed in all of the animals and efficiently transported into the bile canaliculi. Concomitant dosing with ketoconazole increased the area under the plasma concentration-time curve for AZD0837 (by 99%) and for AR-H067637 (by 51%). The effect on the prodrug most likely arose from inhibited CYP3A-mediated metabolism. Reduced metabolism also seemed to explain the increased plasma exposure of the active compound because ketoconazole prolonged the terminal half-life with no apparent effect on the extensive biliary excretion and biliary clearance. These in vivo results were supported by in vitro depletion experiments for AR-H067637 in pig liver microsomes with and without the addition of ketoconazole.
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  • Resultat 1-7 av 7

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